Ziwa Rhino Sanctuary (70 sq km, in Nakasongola District, 175 km north of Kampala on the main Kampala-Gulu road) is the only place in Uganda where wild rhinoceros can be seen — Uganda’s entire wild rhino population was poached to extinction by 1983, and the Rhino Fund Uganda programme, which established Ziwa in 2005 with the introduction of six southern white rhino from Kenya and the USA, has grown the sanctuary population to 34 individuals (2025) in just 20 years. The Ziwa rhino walk — the opportunity to approach wild white rhino on foot with an armed ranger — is one of East Africa’s most unusual wildlife encounters, and the sanctuary’s position directly on the Kampala-Murchison Falls road makes it the natural 2-hour stop on the way to or from Murchison. This guide covers Ziwa for 2025.
The Rhino Walk
The Ziwa rhino walk is the signature experience — a walking approach to wild white rhino in their natural (unfenced at the individual animal level within the 70 sq km sanctuary perimeter) habitat with an armed UWA ranger and a sanctuary guide. The walk typically takes 30–90 minutes to locate the rhino on foot, then 20–30 minutes in proximity. White rhino behaviour at Ziwa: fully accustomed to humans on foot (the sanctuary’s walking approach is standard, and the rhino have been observed by humans on foot throughout their lives), which means encounters at 15–30 metre proximity are routine. At this distance, a full-grown white rhino bull (2,300 kg, horn length up to 1.5 m) is one of Africa’s most physically overwhelming wildlife experiences. Photography is excellent at Ziwa — the open grassland setting, close approach distance, and good light in the morning provide exceptional rhino photography without the distance constraints of vehicle-based encounters in other African reserves. Entry and walk fee: USD $40 per person (2025). Walk times: 06:00, 09:00, 15:00, 17:00.
The Breeding Programme Success
The Rhino Fund Uganda’s breeding programme at Ziwa is one of African wildlife conservation’s genuine success stories — the growth from 6 introduced rhino in 2005 to 34 individuals in 2025 represents a 467% population increase over 20 years without a single individual lost to poaching (the sanctuary’s anti-poaching infrastructure — 24-hour armed ranger patrols, GPS tracking on all individuals, electric fence perimeter, and community outreach programme) has maintained a zero-poaching record since establishment. The long-term plan: once the Ziwa population reaches approximately 50–60 individuals, selected animals will begin translocation to national parks (Murchison Falls NP and Kidepo Valley NP are identified as the primary reintroduction sites) — re-establishing free-ranging wild rhino in Uganda for the first time since 1983. The current Ziwa breeding rate (2–3 calves per year) suggests the translocation threshold could be reached by approximately 2028–2030.
Other Ziwa Wildlife
Beyond the rhino, Ziwa Rhino Sanctuary’s 70 sq km includes a shoebill stork territory — the sanctuary’s internal papyrus wetland on the Lugogo Swamp system has resident shoebill (typically 1–2 individuals, locatable by the sanctuary staff and accessible by walking or canoe). The shoebill at Ziwa is more reliably found than at Mabamba Swamp (due to the smaller area and consistent monitoring), though the canoe approach at Mabamba is more atmospheric. Uganda kob (Uganda’s most abundant large antelope), oribi (small, graceful grassland antelope), grey crowned crane, and African jacana are all found throughout the sanctuary grasslands.
Getting There and Integrating with Murchison
Ziwa is 175 km from Kampala on the A109 (Kampala-Gulu road), approximately 3 hours from Kampala. The sanctuary entrance (Ziwa Rhino Sanctuary sign, left off the highway) is clearly marked. From Ziwa to Murchison Falls NP Masindi Gate: 90 km, 1.5 hours via Masindi town. Ziwa works perfectly as a 2–3 hour morning stop departing Kampala: leave at 06:00, arrive Ziwa for the 09:00 walk, depart Ziwa at 11:30, arrive Masindi for lunch, and be at Paraa by 14:30 for the afternoon game drive. No safari to Murchison Falls should pass Ziwa without stopping — the additional USD $40 per person for an exceptional close-proximity rhino walk is the best value wildlife add-on on the entire northern Uganda circuit. Accommodation at Ziwa: Ziwa Bush Lodge (USD $80–120/night per person B&B — comfortable, basic, on the sanctuary grounds, allows morning and evening walking rhino encounters on the same night).